Set in the swashbuckling era, Age of Booty™ is a casual real-time strategy game that puts players at the helm of their own pirate ship with the goal of sending your enemies to the briny deep, and looting and capturing towns for your pirate faction.

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Set in the swashbuckling era, Age of Booty™ is a casual real-time strategy game that puts players at the helm of their own pirate ship with the goal of sending your enemies to the briny deep, and looting and capturing towns for your pirate faction.
In Age of Booty™, players team up with AI-controlled pirate ships to raid, pillage, sink, and destroy their way to dominance on the high seas. Spoils of war and booty are used to upgrade and customize pirate ships to make them even more deadly as players take on 25 unique challenges and seven of the most devious Pirate Alliances on the high seas. Create custom maps using the intuitive map creation system.

Single player real-time action strategy from Certain Affinity, lead by Max Hoberman, designer of Halo 2 and 3's multiplayer game.

They've resolved the serial code issue and this game would be a ton of fun, but there's no multiplayer support. That's the main point of the game, so I don't even think it's worth the $1 without it. What a shame because this seamed like a lot of fun.

I bet steam can make alot of money distributing cheap games that don't work knowing full well no one is going to contact the developer of a 5+ year old game that cost $1. Steam won't take any ownershlp for unsupported games that they sell to unsuspecting customers.

I wish that I knew before I picked this up that it was a SecureROM DRM'd game before I bought it. I had to try to jump through hoops just to start playing and, in the end, gave up before I actually got to play. Isn't Steam enough DRM?

I'd pass on this, if for no other reason than to send a message to the developer/publisher to stop requiring this sort of thing.

Do not purchase. Hopefully you are reading this prior to buying the game and not after like I did. If you purchase this you wont be able to play it anyway. so even at $0.99 it is a waste of money. Burn the dollar if you want to get actual entertainment value out of it becuase you will not be able to play this game as the CD keys are mostly broken and you will spend hours of your time trying to get a dollar game to work only to have it not.

As the users her have said steam does not give 2 Sh*ts about the issues with their games and will keep on happily taking your money for a game that doesn't work and they will do nothing about it it. Being that they are too big to fail and one of the only viable options out there, F*cking over a small percentage of the community doesn't really matter to them as it wont have any impact.

So do yourself a favor, no matter how fun the game looks, don't purchase it, be sure to read reviews before you buy things and game on!

The game works for me. Steam should give you a 16-digit alpha-numeric code when you purchase. Put that in the Securom (grey pop up) box in the blank line. Don't worry about the other long code (25 or 30 chars), it's generated by them to verify the game. After successfully going through this process once, you should be good. It won't happen every time you launch.

The Gamespy servers are off, so there's no multiplayer, leaderboards, or map generator, which does suck, but you'll be able to get a dollar's worth from the 21 pre-built scenarios.

If Steam could somehow separate the Gamespy servers from the game, even just to open the map generator, that would add a lot. Single players could generate their own maps and choose the number of AI players and win conditions. Is that remotely possible from a programming standpoint?

Potentially good fun but when fullscreen the mouse cursor disappears... so I had to play in a window, which made finding the edge of the screen to scroll around the map very difficult and frustrating. Unfortunately unplayable.

I had read on the forums that they fixed the issues, and that it was now playable. This is NOT true. The game CTD crashes to desktop the moment you start it. Capcom doesn't care, and neither does Steam. I've lost faith if both companies. Apparently there is no refund.